Ef. Fitzgerald et al., FISH PCB CONCENTRATIONS AND CONSUMPTION PATTERNS AMONG MOHAWK WOMEN AT AKWESASNE, Journal of exposure analysis and environmental epidemiology, 5(1), 1995, pp. 1-19
A study was conducted to determine concentrations of polychlorinated b
iphenyls (PCBs) in focal fish and to establish patterns of fish consum
ption of nursing Mohawk women residing near three industrial hazardous
waste sites. From 1986 to 1992, 97 Mohawk women were interviewed with
in one month postpartum. A comparison group consisted of 154 nursing C
aucasians. Samples of 348 local fish were analyzed for PCBs. The resul
ts indicated that fish in the Mohawk area, especially those collected
offshore from the waste sites, had been contaminated with PCBs. The di
etary data showed a greater past prevalence of local fish consumption
among Mohawk mothers, with an overall annual mean of 23.5 local fish m
eals more than one year before the pregnancy compared with 14.1 for th
e control women (p < 0.001). The prevalence of consumption by the Moha
wks, however, declined over time, resulting in overall mean rates of 9
.2 local fish meals one year or less before pregnancy, and 3.9 meals p
er year during pregnancy (p < 0.001 for linear trend). Compared to the
Mohawks, significantly fewer control women stopped eating local fish,
and their rates declined less sharply. A secular trend was also obser
ved in the overall rate of consumption during pregnancy for the Mohawk
s, with those who gave birth in 1986-1989 having a mean of 10.7 local
fish meals per year during pregnancy, compared with means of 3.6 and 0
.9 respectively for women who delivered in 1990 and 1991-1992 (p < 0.0
5 for linear trend). No such trend was apparent for the controls. No b
ackground variable was significantly related to the rate of local fish
consumption among the Mohawks, but a decrease over time in the rate o
f local fish consumption was greater among those Mohawks who ate the m
ost local fish initially (r = -0.76, p < 0.001), or who also reduced t
heir alcohol intake during pregnancy (r = 0.35, p < 0.05). Mohawks wer
e also more likely than the controls to trim the fat, remove the skin
from, and fry any fish they ate during the past year. These dietary ch
anges may be the result of advisories that have been issued over the p
ast decade recommending against the consumption of local fish by pregn
ant and nursing Mohawk women. Such changes, if sustained should reduce
their exposure to PCBs and correspondingly the potential for adverse
health effects.